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Spark

A San Quentin Success Story

Sun, Sep 01, 2013

Situated on a prime piece of real estate overlooking the San Francisco Bay鈥攙alued at upwards of half a billion dollars鈥攊s the . Notorious for its death row, the largest in the country at 700-plus prisoners, the prison has been the subject of numerous books, movies and articles. The institution has also been at the center of controversy in California because of its age鈥攊t was built in 1852鈥攁nd state of disrepair. Legislators have twice overturned approved funding to renovate the death row facilities.

It is here that Tonya Stepanek Church 鈥89 has spent the last 20 years, serving the prison population first as a nurse and more recently as a nursing consultant as part of a larger team focused on construction and activation of health care facilities.

鈥淭he orientation was really eery,鈥 Church remembered of her initiation to the prison. 鈥淭hey showed us a clip from 鈥楢merica鈥檚 Most Wanted.鈥 I remember thinking, 鈥業 can鈥檛 believe I am really here. (The last time she had seen that exact clip was as a freshman at Calvin.) Is this really where I鈥檓 meant to be?鈥欌

More than two decades later, that question has been answered for Church with a resounding 鈥測es.鈥 In fact, along her whole life journey, Church has seen the pieces fit together perfectly to lead her to where she is now.

A youngster's calling

鈥淚n second grade I had a dream that I was nurse,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was strong enough that it stuck with me and made me think that maybe this is what I should do.鈥

A decade later, at Calvin, she entered into the tract. 鈥淚 struggled with anatomy and biochemistry,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 managed to get just high enough grades to stay eligible.鈥 But when she applied to enter the program, she was one of four put on the waiting list. 鈥淚 started to develop the attitude that if it was really meant to be it would happen.鈥

When Calvin hired an additional professor, she was allowed into the program. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really amazing that I even made it through,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hree weeks before my junior year I had to have gall bladder surgery. I was still recovering when I came back to school. I was not going to allow a decision from the doctor鈥檚 office to influence starting school; I was afraid I might not get another chance.鈥

Once in the nursing program, Church loved it. 鈥淚 knew God was calling me to be a different kind of nurse,鈥 she said. For the community health component of her training, she was placed at Michigan Dunes Correctional Facility. 鈥淚 thought it was kind of odd that out of all the places we were being sent, I had to go to a prison. I鈥檒l never forget that as kind-of-na茂ve college students, we had to be told to lock up the alcohol wipes, because inmates would steal them. It was wild.鈥

This experience, though, prepared Church for her later career. 鈥淎lmost every single thing I鈥檝e done has culminated in something I needed to know in the future,鈥 she said.

Making a difference

Early on, one specific instance of nursing care demonstrated to Church the power of personalized attention, a skill she would use often in her journey.

鈥淢y last week as a student, I was working with a lady who was really sick,鈥 said Church. 鈥淭he professor asked me if knew how to call a code. I said to myself, she鈥檚 not coding while I鈥檓 taking care of her. I went in her room, got her up in a chair and I remember thinking her hair is all messy. So I asked her, 鈥榃ould you like me to fix your hair?鈥

鈥淲hen my prof came back in she couldn鈥檛 believe the difference. She said, 鈥楽he looks like an entirely different person.鈥 The nurses on the floor were also amazed at the difference in their patient.

鈥淭hat was the first time I noticed that something very small can make a huge difference; I have seen that play out over and over again in my life. That鈥檚 what made being a nurse so cool for me.鈥

It turned out that working with people was the 鈥渆asy鈥 part of nursing for Church; the test-taking was the harder part.

鈥淚 had just started my job at [then-] Butterworth Hospital in Grand Rapids,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was still in orientation when I walked in the house and saw this gigantic envelope on the table. I knew I had flunked; I didn鈥檛 even have to open it. Taking boards had been a very unpleasant experience. I had test anxiety.鈥

As it turned out, this, too, worked into Church鈥檚 journey. 鈥淎fter I told them at work, they moved me into what was the 鈥榝loat pool.鈥 I thought, 鈥楪reat, I still have a job.鈥 I ended up getting familiar with all of the different areas in the hospital, which never would have happened otherwise.鈥

Still, Church needed to pass the Michigan Board of Nursing licensing exam to continue her career. That鈥檚 when then-Calvin nursing professor Mary Ann Gritter stepped in. 鈥淪he told me that it wasn鈥檛 that I didn鈥檛 know the material; it鈥檚 that I didn鈥檛 know how to take a test. After her mentoring, the questions were not as ominous, and I had no problem passing the boards.鈥

At home in prison

After a few short nursing stints in Michigan, Church moved to California, and when she saw that the state prison system was offering guaranteed shifts, she decided to apply. It was the only job she was offered as there was not a nursing shortage back then, and nurses with 20 years of experience were being laid off, she said.

鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 afraid to work there,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here were always officers close by.鈥

In fact, Church began to relish it: 鈥淥ne of my first inmate patients couldn鈥檛 hear at all,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 got him some ear drops and told him to come back tomorrow. He came back and was so happy. I couldn鈥檛 believe how much of an impact that had on him. Whenever I saw him after that, he would say, 鈥楾hat鈥檚 the nurse that took care of me.鈥欌

While the social and moral worth of a person weighs into many debates over the allocation of medical resources for inmates, for Church this has never been an issue.

鈥淎 lot of people struggle taking caring of inmates, but I鈥檇 rather not know what they did,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 would never want to read the case files; for many of them it would be horrific. I always knew I wanted to be a different kind of nurse, and I never wanted to be a mediocre nurse, so I鈥檝e always done the best I could for them.鈥

As a nurse, Church served as the outside hospital liaison for inmates from San Quentin鈥檚 population including East Block, or death row, for five years. 鈥淭here was a gentleman there that was getting really sick,鈥 said Church. 鈥淲e were getting ready to move him to a hospice bed, but he wanted to reconcile with his son before he died. His son had to fly in from Florida, and I was concerned that his son wouldn鈥檛 know where he was when he came out. I really wanted his son to be able to see him, so I did the best I could by facilitating visiting clearances through sutody connections at both prisons.

鈥淚 think people might have thought it鈥檚 a little late for that. It really is countercultural to do the best for an inmate,鈥 said Church. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 in situations like this that I鈥檝e really felt that I was meant to be a different kind of nurse.鈥

Work in a prison requires a certain type of person. That鈥檚 why Church believes she and her husband, Les, are a good match. The pair met at San Quentin, where Les was a correctional officer, who transported prisoners to off-site medical appointments. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a certain prison culture,鈥 said Tonya. 鈥淯nless you work in a prison, you don鈥檛 understand prison.鈥

Designing prison health care

Tonya understands it pretty well after two decades. She became director of nursing for San Quentin in 2006, and later transition and activation liaison for building projects. In this position, she helped design and activate a new 116,000-square-foot prison health care facility that opened in 2009. 鈥淵ou have to know the operations side to design a good facility,鈥 she said. 鈥淔orm is supposed to follow function.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 how I came to appreciate every step along the way. Here I am a nurse, but somehow God used all of my experiences to bring them together for this project. It鈥檚 one of the most fascinating things I鈥檝e done as a nurse.鈥

Church has faced other challenges along her way, including a recent cancer diagnosis, for which she has received treatment. 鈥淚 never knew how strong my faith was until then,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he roots of my faith are pretty deep; the top was shaken a bit and I had to shift some things in my life.鈥

She returned to work in April as was again assigned to work as a consultant for the statewide Health Care Facility Improvement Plan. In fact, a new $906 million prison health care facility she assisted the activation team with for six months was scheduled to open in Stockton, Calif., this summer. More plans are also in the works in California.

Church is also leaving open the door for another calling God may have for her; medical missions is one such opportunity.

鈥淵ou have to have the faith to step out where God wants you to be,鈥 said Church. 鈥淎t Calvin I was taught that I was saved to serve, not saved to sit. God wants me to serve, and I feel uncomfortable when I don鈥檛.鈥

Her car鈥檚 license plate reads RMNS828 for Romans 8:28. 鈥淎nd we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him, who have been called according to His purpose.鈥

鈥淢y entire life I have experienced the truth of that verse,鈥 said Church. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to see what God has designed next for me.鈥

Lynn Rosendale is managing editor of Spark.